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St Anthony's Parish is part of the Catholic Diocese of Wollongong. The main Parish Church is in Tahmoor, located south-west of Sydney in the Wollondilly Region. St Anthony's Parish also incorporates St Patrick's Church at Menangle and the Sheil Memorial Church at Picton.
The areas covered by St Anthony's Parish include Bargo, Balmoral, Buxton, Couridjah, Douglas Park, Lakesland, Menangle, Picton, Pheasants Nest, Tahmoor, Thirlmere, Wilton and Yanderra. Parish Priest Of St Anthony's Parish
Fr John Ho PP with Bishop Peter Ingham Vision Statement Of St Anthony's Parish As members of St Anthony's Parish, we share the responsibility of building up the spiritual and material welfare of our community by promoting God's values of love, justice and peace and extending this message of goodwill beyond our immediate boundaries. The Patron Saint Of Our Parish - St. Anthony
of Padua 0 Sweet Jesus: what is there sweeter than Thee? St. Anthony is among the most popular of all saints. This
has less to do with the memory of his spellbinding preaching than with
his posthumous career as a miracle-worker. Throughout the centuries Anthony's
intercession has been piously sought in matters great and small, with
particular homage accorded his knack for locating lost objects. Lost amid
this devotion has been much recollection of who St. Anthony was, apart
from the fact (important to many of those who most honor his name) that
he was Italian. (Actually, Portuguese.) Anthony was born in Lisbon in 1195 and first entered religious
life as an Augustinian canon in Coimbra. There one day he had occasion
to wait on a group of five visiting Franciscans who were on the way to
Morocco. Anthony was greatly impressed by these courageous missionaries,
the more so when news came of their martyrdom and when their remains returned
by way of his monastery. At once Anthony was inspired to apply to the Franciscans.
He was accepted and was even granted his wish to follow in the footsteps
of the martyrs. But no sooner had he arrived in Morocco than he became
so ill that he was forced to turn around. In Italy he attended the famous
Franciscan chapter of 1221, the last one held during the lifetime of St.
Francis. It was also the last Chapter to which all Friars were invited
and was thus, with three thousand brothers in attendance, a considerable
jamboree. Afterward Anthony was assigned to a small hospice for lay brothers
at Monte Paolo. It was a lowly assignment, befitting a brother who, up
to this time, had shown no remarkable talents. But soon Anthony's star would shine. When, on an important
religious occasion, there was found to be no available preacher, Anthony
was asked to extemporize. He proceeded to astonish his audience with the
unexpected elegance, conviction, and profound learning of his sermon.
Word quickly spread, and Anthony soon received a letter from Francis himself
authorizing him to preach and to teach theology to the friars. Eventually Anthony was sent on a preaching mission that
covered all of Italy. Thousands flocked to hear his open-air sermons,
and his visits had the impact of a spiritual revival. It was said that
men gave up gambling and drinking at the sound of his melodious voice.
Criminals were reformed. Feuding enemies were reconciled. For these effects,
quite apart from the miracles that adorn his legend, Anthony earned his
reputation as the "Wonder Worker." Anthony's sermons integrated a message of spiritual uplift
with a bold challenge to the social vices of the day, especially greed
and the practice of usury. He attacked the tyranny of the powerful and
was unsparing when it came to the failings of the clergy. "You there,
with the mitre!" he addressed one visiting archbishop, apparently
in particular need of a prophetic word. He volunteered for hazardous mission
tours among the Catharist heretics in southern France. And so successful
were his exhortations to charity wherever he preached that he was also
well known by the title, "Friend of the Poor." Weary from his exhausting mission, Anthony died on June 13, 1231, at the age of thirty-six. He was buried in Padua, the city where he had spent the last years of his life. It is a measure of his popularity that Anthony's canonization followed only one year after his death. In 1946 Pope Pius XII declared him also a Doctor of the Church.
The Statue of St Anthony Of Padua located at St Anthony's at Tahmoor The Prayer To St Anthony O Holy Saint Anthony, gentlest of Saints, your love for God and charity for His creatures made you worthy when on earth to possess miraculous powers. Miracles waited on your word, which you were ever ready to speak for those in trouble or anxiety. Encouraged by this thought, we implore you to obtain for us .. (here mention your request). The answer to our prayers may require a miracle; even so, you are the Saint of Miracles. O gentle and loving Saint Anthony, whose heart was ever full of human sympathy, whisper our petitions into the ears of the sweet infant Jesus, who loved to be folded in your arms, and the gratitude of our hearts will ever be yours. Amen. Saint Anthony of Padua is invoked in a wide variety of needs but is especially renowned as the "Patron of Lost Objects". |